kinda sounds like the person suing McDonalds for giving him one napkin. One issue, which isn't a killer, out of billions served? Canon is known quite well for their QC, at least in their higher end models. I am doubting this issue. Internal information? Curious to see how this pans out.

<p>We’re not sure whether or not we’ll post the rest of the internal documents we have in our possession. If you think there’s value in us doing so, <a href="http://www.canonrumors.com/forum/index.php?topic=20341.0">please sound off in our forum</a>.</p><p><strong><span style="color: #ff0000;">c</span>r</strong></p>[/html]

This is a little like the "friend" that has info about your wife's infidelity and is happy to tell you he has the info, but not sure he wants to actually tell you.

Get serious CR Guy, either you have the info, or you don't, you decide with advice from your legal counsel to share the info, or don't.

Pfff talk about a storm in a tea cup. Every company issues service advisories for small issues that come up and similarly they make small changes to the parts used in products over time. If CR guy has posted the most serious issues first then I don't see the need to post the rest. 1DX has an issue when operating outside of specs, a noisy focus ring - annoying but really does that affect the shot? If that's all it is then its a waste of time posting the rest just to incite the rabid masses.

If you have something more serious then post otherwise stick to canonrumors and don't become canonleaks.

Unfortunately, some people can see things differently than others. Its not clear cut as to the definition of a design flaw. If a product does not work forever, is it because of a design flaw?

If a product works for a period of time beyond the warranty, is it a design flaw? We'd all like our items to work forever, but it does not happen.

Where we worked, a person who was not qualified and did not understand the technical issues started up a web site and was notifying newspapers of a big problem, and showed a stolen video of a test of the product bursting into flames. We were, in fact, trying to test the design limits and see what it took to do just that. We then modified the product so it could pass that test. The person had left the company by then and did not have the complete picture, much less a understanding of what he saw. The newspaper reporters asked what the issue was, and we brought them in and showed them everything, the failures and the fix. Of course, the person involved then accused them of being bought off. Some people are that way, so its best to investigate rather than spreading information that might be incomplete, or even biased.

Since CR is not a investigative agency, it might be best to turn it over to a newspaper or Attorney General, or both. Since Canon USA is in New York, that state might be a place to start. Same with Canada, start in Ontario. Let them investigate or at least ask for a explanation first.

I'd be one who was very cautious about releasing stolen documents that can't be confirmed. I'd suggest to the leaker that he submit them to someone else, maybe he has and the others found them to be unreliable?

Unfortunately, some people can see things differently than others. Its not clear cut as to the definition of a design flaw. If a product does not work forever, is it because of a design flaw?

If a product works for a period of time beyond the warranty, is it a design flaw? We'd all like our items to work forever, but it does not happen.

Where we worked, a person who was not qualified and did not understand the technical issues started up a web site and was notifying newspapers of a big problem, and showed a stolen video of a test of the product bursting into flames. We were, in fact, trying to test the design limits and see what it took to do just that. We then modified the product so it could pass that test. The person had left the company by then and did not have the complete picture, much less a understanding of what he saw. The newspaper reporters asked what the issue was, and we brought them in and showed them everything, the failures and the fix. Of course, the person involved then accused them of being bought off. Some people are that way, so its best to investigate rather than spreading information that might be incomplete, or even biased.

Since CR is not a investigative agency, it might be best to turn it over to a newspaper or Attorney General, or both. Since Canon USA is in New York, that state might be a place to start. Same with Canada, start in Ontario. Let them investigate or at least ask for a explanation first.

I'd be one who was very cautious about releasing stolen documents that can't be confirmed. I'd suggest to the leaker that he submit them to someone else, maybe he has and the others found them to be unreliable?

Hi folks.I have slightly reworded a famous quote.All it takes for dishonest manufacturers to flourish is for good customers to remain silent! I concur with a lot of what has been said, CR guy needs to know he / his website will survive any fall out from the action of making his public. It is somewhat drumming up business if you don't intend to publish! Any company worth it's salt will have ongoing development, but this is usually around saving an ounce here or a penny there, when ongoing development results in a strengthened or redesigned item to prevent failure rates above the accepted percentage, whatever that may be for that particular item, then charging customers to replace that item after it fails is dishonest at best. The main thing to keep in mind is that almost every item has an acceptable failure rate and your item may be one of those, just because you find ten people complaining of a failure with an item doesn't make it a design fault, how many of that item are in the wild? 10, 100, 1000, 10000? What is an acceptable failure rate in a mass produced item? It may be as high as ten percent thought 1 percent or less is generally considered acceptable (unless I'm holding the broken one ). I would want to know failure rates before jumping on the bandwagon.